Authors: Jeffrey E. Young,Janet S. Klosko
Tags: #Psychology, #General, #Self-Help, #Personal Growth, #Self-Esteem
You feel like a failure relative to other people you consider your peers. Most of the time, you are probably in touch with your lifetrap, and your sense of failure is close to the surface.
KATHLEEN: I’m just a stupid person. I don’t have what it takes to get ahead. Over and over, I watch younger people get jobs at my level and then pass by me.
I mean,
I’m
thirty-eight years old and
I’m
competing for promotions with twenty-two and twenty-three-year-olds. It’s humiliating. You can’t get much worse than that.
As with Kathleen, your feelings of failure are painful.
Most of the people with this lifetrap are more like Kathleen than Brian. That is, their actual level of achievement is lower than their potential. Their outward status generally matches their inner sense of failure. Occasionally, we see people like Brian, who have achieved a great deal but feel fraudulent.
BRIAN: I feel really out of place where I work. Ifeel like everyone around me is top-shelf I don’t belong there. Somehow I’ve deceived everyone into thinking I’m more intelligent and competent than I am. And it’s only a matter of time before they all discover the truth.
In any case, no matter what your actual status or degree of accomplishment, the inner world is the same. Whether you
appear
to be a success or not, most of the time you experience yourself as a failure. Both Kathleen and Brian feel that because of their own shortcomings, they are doomed to fail.
You reinforce the Failure lifetrap primarily through Escape. Your avoidance is what holds you back. You avoid taking the steps necessary to widen your knowledge and advance your career. You let opportunities for success pass you by. You are afraid that if you try you will fail.
KATHLEEN: A few weeks ago I went and talked to my boss about letting me be in charge of scheduling for this one project. It’s really rare for me to make that kind of move, but I just felt like I had to do it.
Anyway, my boss told me to write up a proposal. You know, a plan, whatever. Well, three weeks have gone by and I still haven’t done it. The project is starting tomorrow and now it’s really too late.
With the Failure lifetrap, the degree to which you use Escape as a coping style is often massive. People avoid developing skills, tackling new tasks, taking on responsibility—all the challenges that might enable them to succeed. Often the attitude is, „What’s the use?“ You feel there is no point in making the effort when you are doomed to fail anyway.
Your avoidance may be subtle. You may
appear
to tackle your work but still do things to avoid. You procrastinate, you get distracted, you do the work improperly, or you mishandle the tasks you take on. These are all forms of
self sabotage.
BRIAN: This last project my boss gave me to do, Tve been so anxious about it that I didn’t get started until this week. I’m really under pressure now. I can’t possibly do the job the way it should be done at this point. The whole thing has got me so frazzled.
Your tendency to run away from the possibility of failure undermines your ability to do a good job. You may suffer real penalties, such as getting demoted or fired.
Another way you surrender to your lifetrap is by constantly twisting events and circumstances to reinforce your view of yourself as a failure. You exaggerate the negative and minimize the positive.
BRIAN: I know I blow things out of proportion. Like yesterday, my boss gave me this really positive feedback about a press release I had written. But he criticized one tiny detail about it. And of course I went home and fretted about that detail all night.
You may also have feelings of depression.
KATHLEEN: I just feel like I’m at a certain point in my life, and I haven’t gotten to where I want to be. And I feel like I’m never gonna get there.
You feel depressed about your failures, and see little hope for change.
The Failure lifetrap is usually an easy lifetrap to assess. You are probably well aware of your painful feelings of failure.
The origin of this lifetrap lies in feelings of failure in childhood. This can happen a number of different ways:
ORIGINS OF THE FAILURE LIFETRAP
As you can see, the Failure lifetrap may be associated with other lifetraps—Defectiveness, Abuse, Unrelenting Standards, Emotional Deprivation, Dependence, Social Exclusion, or Entitlement.
Kathleen had a number of forces propelling her toward failure as a child.
KATHLEEN: One thing that hurt me was that my parents didn’t really care about school It was part of their general not caring about me really. I mean, other kids would be scared to death to bring their report cards home. I never worried about it because they just didn’t care. My problem was getting them to look at it long enough to sign it.
It’s weird, but I used to be jealous of kids who were scared to bring their report cards home. I remember once being in the girls’ room at school with my friend Meg. She was in the stall, crying and carrying on, „I can’t go home, my father’s gonna kill me,“ on and on. And as upset as she was, I felt jealous of her. Isn’t that weird?
THERAPIST: She had someone who cared.
KATHLEEN: Yeah. But the other thing that happened was that I was sick a lot. I had asthma. I missed a lot of school in those early years. I fell behind and just never caught up. It’s a miracle, really, that I ever made it through college.
There was no one to help Kathleen when she fell behind. Nobody pushed her to catch up. Instead she began her lifelong pattern of escape.
KATHLEEN: I would try to get out of going to school by playing sick. If there was a test or a paper due, I would get sick that day. I just couldn’t face the humiliation of failing again.
THERAPIST: Would you try to learn the stuff?
KATHLEEN: Nah. I would just watch television. I spent my childhood watching television.
Kathleen failed to develop the skills and discipline necessary to get ahead. Her approach was to try to do as little as possible and hide it as best as she could.
Kathleen’s lifetrap was an outgrowth of Emotional Deprivation. For Brian the issue was more one of Defectiveness.
BRIAN: My father was always criticizing me about everything, not just about school. Actually achievement was the one area where I could sort of do okay. But I never trusted it, I never trusted that I really knew what I was doing.
Brian had been feeling fraudulent about success for a long time. As a child, he did well in school, but he felt so defective generally that he could not believe in himself.
Upon reflection it seemed that his father felt competitive with him. He put Brian down as a way of feeling better about himself.
BRIAN: Particularly after he lost his job and we had to move to a smaller house, when I was eight, he would really light into me. He would boost himself up by humiliating me.
His father was threatened by Brian’s success at school. He was afraid that Brian would surpass him, so he punished Brian for succeeding. His father undermined his self-confidence and damaged Brian’s ability to believe in himself.
The Failure lifetrap feeds on itself in such a way that the entire arena of work becomes a disaster for you. Your expectation of failure becomes a self-fulfilling prophesy. Here are many of the ways you sabotage yourself and make sure that you remain a failure.
FAILURE LIFETRAPS
Many of these patterns boil down to the issue of Escape: you avoid taking the steps necessary to advance yourself. Through your avoidance, you constantly twist events to reinforce your view of yourself as stupid, untalented, and incompetent.
Excelling in other roles is a way of compensating for the lifetrap. Men might excel in sports or seducing women; women might excel in their looks or ability to give to others. But, particularly for men, it is hard to develop an effective compensation. What does society value more in a man than achievement? A man who feels like a failure in his career is likely to feel like a failure as a person. Of course, this difference between men and women is changing as careers become more central to women’s lives.
As a teenager Brian compensated for his lifetrap by adopting the image of a rebel. He dressed outlandishly and rode motorcycles. He became skilled at chasing women. He found a way to feel good about himself without tackling the prime issue. He compensated for his feelings of failure by carving out an area of success.
One way Kathleen compensates is by choosing a partner who is successful. Wayne, her husband, is the head writer on a top-rated television show. When she goes to job functions, such as cocktail parties and conventions, she moves in the highest circles.
You may be drawn to other roles or to partners who are successful to compensate for your feelings of failure. This is really another avoidance strategy on your part. It is another way for you to escape facing the challenges of achievement.
These compensations are fragile. They easily collapse, and yield to the feeling of failure. You need to deal with the issue of achievement more directly.
These are the steps to changing your lifetrap:
CHANGING YOUR FAILURE LIFETRAP
If you have, in fact, failed relative to your peers: